Severe thunderstorms in the eastern US have caused widespread power outages
and affected a number of popular websites hosted by online seller Amazon.
The Washington Post's website reported that the storms knocked out power
for "more than 1.5 million homes and businesses" across Maryland and Virginia
on Friday night.
Technology site VentureBeat reported that websites using Amazon's Elastic
Compute Cloud service in North Virginia like Netflix, Instagram, Pinterest,
Heroku were all down at one point late Friday evening and early Saturday
morning.
Checks by Al Jazeera at 07:00 GMT on Saturday showed that most of these
sites, excluding Instagram, were working properly.
Instagram, the popular photo sharing site that Facebook recently bought
for $1bn, posted a message on Twitter from its support account at 03:16 GMT,
"We're currently experiencing technical difficulties and we're working to
correct the issues. Thanks for your patience."
At 03:50 GMT, NetFlix, a popular site for streaming movies and TV
programmes, also posted a message on Twitter from its support account, "We're
aware that some members are experiencing issues streaming movies and TV shows.
We're working to resolve the problem."
At 03:40 GMT, Amazon posted an update on its Web Services site on its
Elastic Compute Cloud server: "We can confirm that a large number of instances
in a single Availability Zone have lost power due to electrical storms in the
area. We are actively working to restore power.
The last message, posted at 05:36 GMT, said, "We continue to bring
impacted instances and volumes back online. As a result of the power outage,
some EBS volumes may have inconsistent data."
Sean Ludwig, from VentureBeat, wrote in a blog post, "The outage
underscores the vulnerabilities of depending on the public cloud versus using
your own data centers."
The outages on Amazon's cloud server come two weeks after a similar
incident when a number of popular websites hosted by Amazon went down. A
report into the incident by Amazon found that a configuration error was made
during a routine upgrade.
"With the critical Amazon outage, which is the second this month, we
wouldn't be surprised if these popular services started looking at other
options," Ludwig wrote.
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News Column
US Storms Knock Popular Sites Offline
July 2, 2012
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Source: (c)2012 Al Jazeera (Doha, Qatar)
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